
David Twersky, Political Journalist and Peace Activist, Dies at 60 |
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David
Twersky, a prominent Zionist activist, political journalist and peace advocate
in Israel and America, died July 16 after a long illness. He was 60.
In the
course of more than 40 years in the public eye, Twersky was a nationally known
student leader, a kibbutz member and Israel Labor Party leader, a Knesset aide,
respected Israeli political analyst, Washington correspondent of the Forward
and international affairs director of the American Jewish Congress. He was also
a published poet and contributor to literary journals, including the Partisan
Review. A charismatic figure with a quick wit, he left a profound impact in
each of his varied careers.
Twersky
was born in 1950 in the Bronx, N.Y., the son of a militant leftist garment
worker who was in turn the rebellious scion of a leading Hasidic rabbinic
dynasty. David was raised in a cooperative housing project in the Bronx, the
Sholem Aleichem Houses, known for its diverse population of Bundists,
anarchists, communists and a handful of Zionists. His mother Anna died when he
was 8, and his father later remarried.
Despite
their leftist politics, David’s parents enrolled him in the Ramaz School, an
Orthodox day school in New York, which he attended through 12th grade. In his
teens he joined Habonim, the Labor Zionist youth movement, and rose to become a
national leader. He attended the City College of New York, where his professors
and mentors included Elie Wiesel, Rabbi Irving Greenberg and Hebrew
poet-novelist Shimon Halkin.
Active
in antiwar protests and campus Jewish activism, he was tapped in 1970 to become
national chairman of the North American Jewish Students Network, a sprawling,
1960s-style umbrella that brought together the left-wing Radical Zionist
Alliance and the early havurah movement along with Lubavitch Youth, the Jewish
Defense League, the Jewish Labor Youth Bund, various antiwar groups and others
for annual retreats and teach-ins. In addition to traveling and speaking for
the Network, he edited the Jewish Student Press Service, which served some 50
independent Jewish student newspapers.
In
1969, Twersky made the first of several clandestine trips to the Soviet Union,
organized by the Israeli prime minister’s office, to meet with Jewish
activists. His experiences there made him a passionate, lifelong anticommunist,
which periodically set him apart from and at odds with allies on the left.
In
1974, Twersky went to Israel with a group of American Habonim graduates to
establish Kibbutz Gezer on an abandoned kibbutz site near the Tel
Aviv-Jerusalem highway. He was almost immediately recruited to work in Labor
Party headquarters, where he was considered a protégé of Abba Eban. He served
in the party’s international relations department, working closely with the
London-based Socialist International, and edited an English-language political
monthly, Spectrum. He also launched a literary quarterly, Shdemot, under the
auspices of the kibbutz movement.
During
the 1982 Lebanon War he saw combat in an artillery unit. Afterward he was
tapped as a Knesset legislative aide and became part of a group of young Turks
that included Yossi Beilin and Avraham Burg.
In
1986, concerned about his father’s age and health, he returned to the United
States, where he took up journalism full-time. When the Forward Association
launched its weekly English-language publication in 1990, he joined founding
editor Seth Lipsky as deputy editor and Washington bureau chief. By now he was
married to Israeli television journalist Ginny Medved and had two small
children.
Twersky’s
seven years in the Forward’s Washington bureau were among the most fruitful and
controversial of his life. Leaping headfirst into his new role, he broke
several sensational scoops early in the Clinton years that embarrassed the
administration and infuriated some of Twersky’s longtime friends and allies on
the left. Most famously, he unearthed information that sabotaged the job
prospects of Johnnetta Cole, a Clinton transition team appointee who was
considered a leading candidate for secretary of education, and Lani Guinier, a
law professor who was nominated to be assistant attorney general for civil
rights.
Late in
the 1990s, the Twerskys left Washington and moved to New Jersey, again to be
near family. David took an apparent demotion to head the MetroWest Jewish News,
the weekly organ of the local Jewish federation. Over the next five years he
took over the weeklies of five smaller federations and made the renamed New
Jersey Jewish News a heavyweight player in state politics, alternately wooed,
consulted and feared by gubernatorial aides and U.S. senators.
Finally,
during the second Bush administration, Twersky returned to global politics,
signing on with the American Jewish Congress as director of international
affairs. Among other things, he conducted critical back-channel diplomacy with
the governments of Pakistan, Venezuela and Russia. He retired in 2008 when his
cancer began to limit his mobility.
Word of
Twersky’s death produced a flood of emotional transatlantic email messaging
from individuals from various periods in his life, many declaring that he had
changed their lives. Zev Yaroslavsky, a Los Angeles County supervisor and
onetime Habonim bunkmate, wrote that David “was one of the most brilliant human
beings I ever knew,” and that he “had a profound influence on me and my
thinking” during their camp days as high school students. “What I loved about
him was that he took what he did seriously, but he didn’t take himself too
seriously.”
Muki
Tsur, an author, historian and former secretary-general of the kibbutz
movement, wrote that Twersky was “a rebel, a dead-serious jester, a man of the
people and a dreamer.”
He was,
Tsur added, “a figure of hope for all of us. Israel lost out when he left us
years ago out of sensitivity to our failings and his desire to preserve his
love unblemished. And yet American Jewry couldn’t quite absorb him, because he
was the antithesis of bourgeois, not in rhetoric but in the way he lived his
life.”
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